New Results
Origins of pandemic clones from environmental gene pools
View ORCID ProfileB. Jesse Shapiro, Inès Levade, Gabriela Kovacikova, Ronald K. Taylor, Salvador Almagro-Moreno
doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/063115
B. Jesse Shapiro
1Department of Biological Sciences, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Inès Levade
1Department of Biological Sciences, University of Montreal, Montreal, Quebec, Canada.
Gabriela Kovacikova
2Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
Ronald K. Taylor
2Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
Salvador Almagro-Moreno
2Department of Microbiology and Immunology, Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA.
3Burnett School of Biomedical Sciences, College of Medicine, University of Central Florida, Orlando, Florida, USA.
Article usage
Posted July 10, 2016.
Origins of pandemic clones from environmental gene pools
B. Jesse Shapiro, Inès Levade, Gabriela Kovacikova, Ronald K. Taylor, Salvador Almagro-Moreno
bioRxiv 063115; doi: https://doi.org/10.1101/063115
Subject Area
Subject Areas
- Biochemistry (11703)
- Bioengineering (8718)
- Bioinformatics (29127)
- Biophysics (14930)
- Cancer Biology (12048)
- Cell Biology (17353)
- Clinical Trials (138)
- Developmental Biology (9406)
- Ecology (14143)
- Epidemiology (2067)
- Evolutionary Biology (18266)
- Genetics (12219)
- Genomics (16765)
- Immunology (11841)
- Microbiology (28003)
- Molecular Biology (11551)
- Neuroscience (60804)
- Paleontology (450)
- Pathology (1864)
- Pharmacology and Toxicology (3229)
- Physiology (4939)
- Plant Biology (10383)
- Synthetic Biology (2877)
- Systems Biology (7333)
- Zoology (1642)